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San Joaquin County Fairgrounds targeted for affordable housing development
Under Governor Newsom s Excess Land for Affordable Housing Executive Order, 110 of the 250 acres of fairground land is expected to be developed Author: Kurt Rivera Updated: 6:35 PM PDT July 20, 2021
STOCKTON, Calif. Since 1860, the corner of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd and South Airport Way has been home to the San Joaquin County Fairgrounds.
Now, it s being targeted for affordable housing. So this is a significant investment in Stockton, said Stockton Mayor Kevin Lincoln.
The project falls under Governor Gavin Newsom s Excess Land for Affordable Housing Executive Order.
110 of the 250 acres of fairground land will be turned into affordable housing and mixed use housing.
Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia Joins Linc Housing and the Community to Celebrate the Completion of 95 New Affordable and Supportive Homes at Spark at Midtown
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Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia joins Linc Housing, county and city officials, and other partners to celebrate the completion of Spark at Midtown, a 95-unit affordable and supportive housing community for low-income families and people who have experienced homelessness. The new building also features ground floor space that houses the YMCA of Greater Long Beach Community Development Branch’s Youth Institute and Change Agent Productions, as well as a Dignity Health St. Mary Medical Center health clinic. A third space is targeted to a business that will bring healthy food options to the neighborhood.
How do you build better lives? By building more homes, says MidPen Housing CEO Matt Franklin bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Orange County Cities Sue State Over Housing Mandates
A lawsuit filed by an association of Orange County cities alleges California’s housing mandate violated the state local planning laws.
The Orange County Council of Governments (OCCOG) filed the lawsuit June 21 against the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) regarding the 1.34 million home mandate in Southern California; about 183,000 of those units are in Orange County.
“HCD did not follow the statutes outlined in state law to develop the projected number of units needed in the next eight years to adequately house Orange County’s population,” OCCOG Chair Trevor O’Neil said in a statement.